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Home Articles Visa Plans To Add 4 New Stablecoins Across 4 Blockchains

Visa Plans To Add 4 New Stablecoins Across 4 Blockchains

Simon Simba
Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.
Updated: October 29th, 2025
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
Joseph Alalade
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
News Lead and Editor
Joseph is a content writer and editor who has actively participated in crypto for over 6 years. He enjoys educating others about Web3 and covering its updates, regulatory developments, and exciting stories.

Visa has announced plans to add support for four new stablecoins across four different blockchain networks.

This expansion follows record momentum in Visa’s stablecoin-linked card spending, which surged fourfold year-over-year, highlighting growing global adoption and new use cases for programmable payments within its platform.

During Visa’s Q4 2025 earnings call, CEO Ryan McInerney detailed that the company’s stablecoin settlement platform now supports conversions between two currencies and over 25 fiat currencies, with monthly Visa stablecoin volumes pushing an annualized $2.5 billion run rate.

Since 2020, Visa’s total crypto and stablecoin flows have surpassed $140 billion, with more than $100 billion of this linked to direct card-based asset purchases and $35 billion to spending on digital assets through Visa credentials.

Visa Expands Settlement, Use Cases, and Infrastructure

Visa’s stablecoin expansion arrives alongside several initiatives aimed at reimagining cross-border liquidity, settlement, and value transfer.

The company has enabled banks to mint and burn their own stablecoins on the Visa Tokenized Asset Platform, piloting pre-funding options for Visa Direct that allow remitters, financial institutions, and enterprises to utilize stablecoins as faster and more flexible liquidity management tools.

These programs target regions and market segments where existing fiat-based corridors struggle with latency, volatility, or high costs, directly addressing demands in emerging markets and the gig economy.​

The announcement named stablecoin partners, including Paxos, ushered in support for USDG and PYUSD on networks such as Stellar, Avalanche, Ethereum, and Solana.

More than 130 stablecoin-linked Visa card programs now operate across 40 countries, blending the efficiency of blockchain rails with Visa’s established global reach.

Further, Visa’s consulting arm is also guiding clients through stablecoin implementation, indicating that the expansion forms part of a larger “Visa-as-a-Service” offering with billions of endpoints linking cards, wallets, and accounts.

Driving Growth in Digital and Cross-Border Payments

Visa’s leadership describes stablecoins as central to capturing untapped product-market fit in emerging markets and cross-border transactions, the largest global opportunities for payment innovation.

Enhanced stablecoin adoption is expected to streamline remittances, B2B payments, and instant payouts to gig economy workers, all while reducing friction and costs for users. 

The company’s ongoing push into tokenization and AI-powered anti-fraud protection strengthens privacy and security for both traditional and crypto users, with over 16 billion Visa tokens now powering e-commerce transaction layers.

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Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.